@cobblepot said:
BibDesk is Mac-only. You may not care now, but if you ever work with other people and need to work together using a group library, you will!

Why? You could just share the BibTex-File or?

There are different degrees of "working together", I suppose. People can copy-paste plain text and email it to each other at one level. Another level is sharing a BibTex file. But with Zotero group libraries you can have multiple people change individual entries at the same time and have changes synced to local libraries (without having to sync the entire large library), as well as adding and edit each other's notes and file attachments. It also retains the same unique item IDs across different users' libraries to keep citations straight when working on group documents.

Hi. The goal is to build a PKM for myself on a Mac. I am using a copy of The Archive and need a Reference Manager to go along with it that is easy enough to use. The extent to my "technical skills" is knowing Markdown; I don't know LaTeX. I want to pick a reference tool now and forget about it. I was hoping the poll results would sway me to one application over another, but since posting this thread, I am none the wiser. Please advise. // @ctietze@sfast

I use Zotero. I enjoy its user-friendly interface, where I can organize references into folders (it allows multiple storage), and it has a very handy feature for auto-creating entries using ISBN and DOI numbers.

Also, I keep my Zotero library synced to a BibTex file using the BetterBibTex extension.

Hi. Thanks for responding. My main concern with using Zotero is its memory usage. It's taking more than 300 MB compared to other managers.

Can you export your Zotero library to a different application like BibDesk or Bookends in case you stop using Zotero in the future?

What is a BibTex file? Why are you syncing your library to it?

@argonsnorts said:
I use Zotero. I enjoy its user-friendly interface, where I can organize references into folders (it allows multiple storage), and it has a very handy feature for auto-creating entries using ISBN and DOI numbers.

Also, I keep my Zotero library synced to a BibTex file using the BetterBibTex extension.

I'm very late to the party here, but another vote for BibDesk. (I had Zotero for a while but I stopped using it for some reason; don't remember exactly why.)
You can have it autofile your papers in your library; you can even store some notes in it. And, if you ever use latex for writing, you'll already have your bib file ready.